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The Simon Heng Column

Posted: 23 September 2004 | Subscribe Online


Our service user organisation held its annual conference this month. We invited an audience of service users, service providers and voluntary organisations. For the conference, we asked some managers to spend a day as service users and report back. The idea was that they would get a flavour of the day services they provide, and give service users the chance to see that providers aren't faceless bureaucrats who just shuffle paper.

All went well until the manager who had spent time in a wheelchair at a day centre gave her presentation. Several wheelchair users became angry, feeling that no able-bodied person could represent their experiences. They felt patronised and insulted, seeing the exercise as a way to deny disabled people their voice.
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I can see their point. From attempts to give social work students the "disabled experience" by getting them to push each other around in wheelchairs, or wearing vision-distorting glasses, through to architects "testing" the accessibility of their buildings by wheeling themselves about, the mistake has been in thinking that this is enough to enable professionals to understand disability issues.

Disabled people's feelings are coloured by years of experience, the knowledge that their situation is permanent and by a lifetime of able-bodied people's reactions. Nothing can accurately replicate this.

On the other hand, just visiting a day centre for a few hours and watching what goes on would only leave an objectified impression. By participating for a whole day, perhaps an able-bodied person would gain a better experience, which could inform and enhance their work. It turned out that our volunteer was clear that, had she really been disabled, what was on offer would not have met her needs. She saw for herself the limitations of a "traditional" day service.

Disabled people have more chances to communicate their experiences: I'm writing this column, for example. So, giving providers a taste of the services they offer and to let users know that providers want to understand more fully was, on balance, worth doing.


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